Weather Snow in north, and rain In south ; rising temperatue 2 Mwt i l A46bp Editorria Of Ha~tred. , VOL. XLIX. No, 58 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, DEC. 2, 1938 PRICE, FIVE CENTS . ..U Daladier Calls- A New Session, Of Parliament To Meet Crisis Soldiers Sent To Subdue Uprising Of Employes; Strilers Storm Factory Sympathy Walkouts} Increase Agitation (By Associated Press) PARIS, Dec. 1-Premier Eduoard Daladier announced today he would convoke Parliament next Thursday for what promised to be a showdown on his three-year plan of "economic mobilization." Scattered walkouts of workers in sympathy with thousands of their fellows who were discharged by priv- ate ipdustries for joining yesterday's abortive general strike confronted the government with a complex new problem. Forces of soldiers and mobile guards such as Daladier employed to break the general strike movement were dispatched to separated regions to meet these new walkouts. Workers Storm Plant The. government ordered the sym- pathy strikes and occupations to be suppressed as firmly as was the gen- eral strike movement-by concilia- tion if possible or by force if neces- sary. Wholesale discharges caused several hundred workers at Raismes, near Valenciennes, to storm a metal plant in an effort to prevent 60 retained employes from continuing their work. Mobile guards intervened. A brief skirmish ensued in which one guard was injured. Several arrests were made and the workers soon were dis- Michigan Will Lead Big Ten In Student HousingNext Year University's Three New, Dormitories Lead Field, Survey By Daily Reveals By CARL PETERSEN Michigan will take the lead among Big-Ten universities in student hous- ing next fall when, following an ex- tensive building program, the percen- tage of students housed in dormitories will increase from 10 perA cent this year to 25 per cent, results of a sur- vey conducted by the Daily reveal. This year Michigan ranks fifth in the conference group, but will jump to first place next year when three dormitories accommodating roughly 1,410 men and one housing 356 wom- en will be completed. Appropriations totalling $2,522,250 were made by the University this year to start the building program which will leach a total of at least $6,000,000 next year. Several of the Big Ten universities reported extensive dormitory build- ing programs under way, but they do Crash Victims Are Identified Here By Cousin Both Bodies Are Removed To Hamilton; Revenue OfficialsBegin A Probe The two men cremated when their car rammed the rear of an oil truck and burst into flames one mile west of Ann Arbor Wednesday night were identified yesterday as William Leuchter, 26 years old, 71 York Street, Hamilton, Ontario, and Michael Mik- oda, 22 years old, 362 Avondale Ave., of the same city. The identifications were made by Miss Julia Sigut, a cousin of Mikoda who lived at the same address, and Charles Shapiro, Hamilton undertak- er. Mutilated beyond recognition, the bodies were identified by their size and by Miss Sigut's knowledge that not approach in size that being un- dertaken by the University. For the present academic year, the University of Chicago leads in dormi- tory housing in the Big Ten kroup with 15 per cent ofhthe student body so accommodated. Northwestern is second with 14.5 per cent, Purdue third with 14 per cent, Ohio~State fourth with 13 per cent, Michigan fifth with 10 per cent, Wisconsin sixth with 9.7 per cent, Minnesota seventh with four per cent and Illi- nois eighth with two per cent. No figures were obtained from Iowa or Indiana. The buildings to be completed here next year will boost the total dormi- tory housing to approximately 2,973 students. Allowing for a proportional increase in enrollment over this year's figure of 11,475, the percentage figure can be set approximately at 25. Three men's dormitories operated by the University at present house 450 men. They are the Law Club with 262; Allen Rumsey dormitories with 116 and Fletcher Hall with 58. Next year the new Union addition will provide accommodations for about 850 men; the medical dorm at Cath- erine and Glen Streets, 150; and the Willard Street dorm for en- gineering, dental and medical stu- -dents, 410. Thus, about 22 per cent of men on campus next year will be housed in dormitories. At present 773 women are accom- modated in Mosher-Jordan, Martha Cook, Betsy Barbour, Helen New- berry and Adelia Cheever dormitories. A new $1,000,000 structure in thej Mosher-Jordan group which will (Continued on Page 2) Adult Educators From Midwest Convene Today' 2nd Conclave Will Discuss Place Of Grownups In CommunitySchooling Negary,500 Jeaders, niwadult ed.uca tion from Ohio and Michigan will Juniors Elect DonTreadwell Hop Chairman Eight Others Are Selected In Day's Balloting For Class Dance Committee Total Of 485 Votes Cast In All Schools A flipped coin that broke up. a tie in the engineering college voting closed the J-Hop elections yesterday after 485 juniors had visited the polls to select nine committeemen from the literary, engineering and architecture colleges. The Junior Dance chairmanship was won by Donald Treadwell, of Grosse Pointe, who polled 150 votes. Other newly-elected literary. college delegates are: Don Nixon, of Ann Ar- bor, with 121 votes, and Harold Hols- huh, of Sturgis, a member who re- ceived 103 votes. Women in the literary college who were elected are, Roberta Leete, of Detroit, with 98 votes and Mary M. Dailey, of Saginaw, with 89 votes. Other candidates in th literary college voting, which attracted 298,j held in Room 231 Angell Hall were: Isadore Binder, Harrison Friend, James Grace, Irving Gerson, Louis Grossman, G. Robert Harrington, Jack Hoover, Daniel Shaw, Walter Stebens, Jack Reed, Margaret Neafie,1 Ruth Chatard, Mary Meloche and Barbara Benedict. In the engineering college, 154 juniors turned out and elected Larry Rinek, of Washington, Pa., with 76 votes, and Almon Conrath, of Ham- ilton, Ontario, with 48 votes. Richard Adams and Refield Zittel, were tied for third place with 38 votes apiece. A toss of a silver dollar gave the third post to Zittel, of Eden, N.Y., zone president of Congress. Other candidates in the engineering college election in Room 348, West Engineering Building, were: Jerome Belsky, Markham Cheever, John Collman, Hugh Estes, Frank Feely, Robert Wiel ang gadi~e N - A handful of juniors in the archi-' tecture school gave Wesley Lane, of Almont, a vote margin over Lillian Zimmerman, who in turn led the oth- er candidate, Annabel Dredge, by a single tally. Representatives from the forestry,, (Continued on Page 6) Dr. Norborg To Speak Here Psychiatry And Religion Topic Of Today's Talk Dr. Sverre Norborg who will speak on "Psychiatry and Religion" at 12:15 p.m. today at the Union and at 4 p.m. at Lane Hall on "Kierkegard" is well known for his numerous works on philosophy, psychology, and compara- tive religion. Dr. Norborg has studied at several universities abroad, including Erlan- gin, Leipzig and Berlin. He later spent two years at Oxford University. In 1931 he received the University of Norway's gold medal in philosophy. Dr. Norborg is now a member of the faculty of the University of Minne- sota. Floor Shows To Open Soph Cabaret Today Campus Leaders Head Goodfellow Drive Here.Dec.10 .0 kern discharged from 1 private shipyards at e supported by affil- ns in the call for a 1 that region tomor- VIRGINIA KEILHOLTZ , * * "Deep Sea Doodles," annual Sopho- more Cabaret, under the direction of Virginia Keilholtz, '41, general chair- man, will open at 9 p.m. today in the ballroom of the League, and will last until 1 p.m. The Cabaret will also be held from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. and from 9 p.m. to midnight tomorrow. Floor shows will be given at 10:30 p.m. today and at 4:30 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. tomorrow. Admission will be twenty-five cents and dancing will be five cents a dance per couple, except Saturday, when there will be a flat rate of ten cents for the whole afternoon. All, women may be °hostesses3, whether or not they are sophomores, and whether or not they signed up. All those who are interested are urged to sign up on the bulletin board of the League, said Betty Lipton, chair- man of the hostess committee. Those who have already signed up are Mar- cia Sharfman, Jeanne Brown, Mar- garet Bedell, Celeste Cawthra, Lor- raine Schwab, Dorothy Abramson, Marion Wright, Mary Anderson, Vir- ginia Paterson, Elizabeth Gould, ,laine'Meale, Winifred-Cooper, Irma Schlon, Betty Barbara Hamburger, and Kathryn Palmer. Also among the hostesses will be1 Dorothy Cowan, Jane Higbee, Rachel Stevens, Catherine Jackson, Jane- Fasciszewska, Frances Allen, Mar-' garet Whittemore, Phyllis Melnick, Alice Thomas, Louise Garden, Helen Culley, Anne Paschal, Frances Hubbs, Janet Grace, Dottie Brooks, Nancy Gould, Ellen Douglas, Mary Mitchell, Nancy Chapman, Irene Musgrove, Marg Kephart, Betty Whitely, Betty Hine, Helen.Ryde, Louise Spencer, Phyllis Hoffmeyer, Patty Main, Bar- bara Grill, Elaine Reed, Evelyn Hunt- ley, and Helen Lapitsky. Others on the hostess list for Soph Cabaret will be Virginia Van Waggon- er, Jane Leonard, Marcy Watkins, Maxine Scott, Marion Gwinn, Betty Bohn, Ida Mae Stitt, Charlotte Vig- noe, Joan Holland, Alice Butler, Beth Jenkins, Priscilla Kennedy, Mary Martha Nichols, Lois Sharbach, Bar- bara Kellogg, Jean Millard, Margaret (Continued on Page 5) Rep.Dies Called Reaction's Tool Patsy O'Toole Visited, Here By Gov. Murphy Governor Murphy came to see Patsy (Samuel O z a d o w s k y) O'Toole yesterday and cheer him on to recovery. Things would have been more natural, however, if the positions had been reversed, for Patsy is the most famous cheerer in these parts. He once cheered so loud, in fact, that President Roosevelt had him moved to another part of the ball- park. The Detroit Tigers figured out a year or so ago that Patsy, now critically ill in University hospital, won them as many games as "Schoolboy" Rowe by heckling opposing nines. Yesterday's visit was brief. "I came down to see what I could do for Patsy, Governor Murphy said. "He's been a devoted friend1 of mine for many years." After the visit Governor Murphy underwent a routine physical check-up. School Bus Hit By Locomotive; Over Score Die Salt Lake Hospitals Filled With Injured Children; Death Toll Still Rising i t 1 i Will Conduct Daily Sale To Raise Funds To Aid Local Welfare Groups Christmas Project Is Now Traditional strike would affect 11,000 workmen., In northern France alone, 20,000 metal workers, 4,000 miners and 4,000 mine railway workers had been dis- charged for answering organized labor's call for a 24-hour strike ofI protest against Daladier's decree laws. An informed but unofficial source close to the Ministry of Interior set the total number of dismissals throughout France at "not more than 70,000," of whom some already have{ been rehired. Labor leaders warned 'grimly thati serious developments might be ex-, pected if punitive measures continued. Through its newspapers Le Popu- laire, the Socialist Party said 1,500,000 workers had been fired or locked out throughout France, including 100,000 in the Paris region. News of - the sympathy strikes reached Daladier while he was in con- ference with top-ranking ministers to decide what penalties should be im- posed on public employes who joined the strike movement. Suspended Without Pay Later the Premier's office an- nounced that leaders of the strike movement in the public services- particularly those who passed the General Confederation of Labor call on to their unions-would be dis- charged immediately. All -other public employes who struck were suspended without pay until the various ministries under which they worked had time to pass on the merits of each case. Industrial sources said the recur- rent strike movement, consisting mostly of sympathy strikes, lacked general momentum. They said the temporary closing of many factories threw many work- ers out of employment, but added that rehiring had started only today and had not progressed sufficiently Pool operator's Trial IsPostponed Examination of John R. Pieters, charged with the operation of a foot- ball pool, scheduled by Justice of Peace Jay H. Payne for 2 p.m. yes- terday was waived by Edward Conlin, Pieter's attorney and the alleged bookmaker was bound over to the March term of the Circuit Court for trial. Pieters, owner of the City Cigar# Store at 106 E. Huron. was arrestedl movea to Hamuton. United States internal revenue offi- cers and customs officials of both the United States and Canada are investi- gating the possibility that the two were smugglers, as their car was loaded with 45 five gallon and 12 one gallon cans of grain alcohol. Special springs had been installed in the rear of the car to carry the heavy load. The alcohol, which sells for $6 a gal- lon in Ontario, may be bought in Chi- cago for $2. A permit would be neces- sary to legally buy the alcohol in such large quantities, and neither Leuch- ter nor Mikoda had taken out a per- mit, federal officers declared yester- day. ASU Discusses Campus Work Club Inaugurates Drive For New Members n t: 0 a s n a a s a t c t E X C t C t { meet here today in the second Great Lakes Regional Conference on Adult Education, combined this year with the 15th annual Michigan Conference on Adult Education.' Points of view in adult education and the place of the community school in adult education will be pri- mary goals of the two general sessions of the conference, to be held today and tomorrow with meetings in the graduate school. The conference is sponsored by the Michigan Council on Adult Education, the Detroit Council on Adult Education and the American Association for Adult Edu- cation, assistedby the University Ex- tension Service. Morse A. Cartwright, executive dir- ector of the American Association for Adult Education, will speak on "Pro- paganda and Adult Education," at a dinner meeting at 6:15 p.m. today in the Union. "Adult Education and the Future of Our American Democracy" will be the subject of a talk by Dr. Eduard C. Lindeman of the New York School of Social Work, at 12:30 p.m. to- morrow at the League as the feature of the final luncheon meeting of the conference. Six separate discussions will make (Continued on Page 6) SALT LAKE CITY, Dec. 1-()- Speeding through a snow storm, a freight train demolished a suburban high school bus near here today, kill- ing at least -a score of children and the bus driver. Twenty-one bodies were brought to; the Salt Lake General Hospital, pos- sibly five mangled remains were be- lieved at mortuaries near the scene,, and four or five of the 12 children in- jured critically may die. The accident was one of the worst of its kind in the nation's history. Many Pupils Absent{ Sixty-one pupils from the, school district served by the buts were absent from Jordan High School. School offi- cials said some may have remained at home because of the storm. Most esti- mates were that the bus carried about 40 passengers, ranging in age from 12 to 16 years. Hospitals and morgues were crowd- ed. The complete list of victims, hos- pital authorities said, can not be as- certained until relatives have reported missing children and school rolls halve been checked. The mangled condition of the bodies made identification in many cases almost impossible. Driver Far- rold Silcox, 28, was believed to have been the only adult on the bus. Crash Near Midvale The disaster occurred at 8:56 a., M.ST., near suburban Midvale 10 miles south of here, as the bus was en route to Jordan High School. E. L. Rehmer, engineer of "The Flying Ute," fastest freight train of the Denver and Rio Grande Western RaIlroad, told Sheriff S. Grant Young the train was running almost two hours late because of the storm. It was due here from Denver at 7 a.m. Rehmer said he was on the right side of the cab and did not see the bus, coming from the left, but fire- man Alfred Elton screamed for him to stop. "Useful channels for Christmas en- thusiasm" has been taken as the theme of the third annual Goodfel- low Drive, the preliminaries of which get under way Sunday when an ex- ecutive committee of campus leaders . convene to fix details for the 10- hour canvas Dec. 10. Goodfellow Day, initiated three years ago by a group of undergrad- uate leaders in response to demands for a coordinated campus welfare movement, now flourishes as an established Michigan Christmas ,tra- dition-a tradition of purpose and salutary accomplishment which has since its inception exalted the Yule- tide spirit for countless underpriv- eleged families, students and hospital patients. Drive Averages $1,200 Annual sums collected by Goodfel- lows peddling special editions of the Daily have averaged more than $1,- 200 in the past three years, almost every penny of which has been poured into the coffers of local welfare agen- cies. The funds, this year will be divided this way: 1. The Social Service Department of the University Hospital will receiv $150 to purchase toys, pictures, addi- tional work shop facilities and books for needy patients. 2. Twenty-five per cent of the re- maining sum will go to the Deans' Discretionary Fund. Funds To Bureau The rest will be sent to the local Family Welfare Bureau earmarked for purchase of Christmas baset and clothes for Ann Arbor families and for year-round work of the Bu- reau. Goodfellows will again pick up clothing and toys volunteered by per- sons calling the Go6dfellow Editor at the Daily 2-3241. The Michigan Daily Goodfellow Award, a loving cup, is to be present- ed to the student organization show- ing the most cooperative spirit, in the judgment of a special committee. Engineers Call For Petitioners Eight Council Posts Open, Two For Each Class A call for petitions for the eight posts of Engineering Council Repre- sentatives, was issued last night by Wesley Warren, '39E, president. Two representatives will be elected from each class, and these men will serve as sole delegates of their classes to the Council, Warren explained. Applicants should submit petitions, with 15 signatures of engineers in their respective classes and with lists of qualifications, to Dean Henry C. Anderson's office by Wednesday, Dec. 7. Prospective candidates will be in- terviewed by the Engineering Council Wednesday evening, and the official slate will be announced in the Daily Tuesday, Dec. 13, the day of the election. At the same time, Warrren an- nounced that the annual Engineering Ball would be held the night of Jan. .13, 1939. A band has not yet been chosen, but the "tops in swing bands" is being sought, he said. Candidates for the senior class office election which is being conducted now by Men's Council, will also be con- sidered at the meeting of the Engi- neering Council at its Wednesday meeting. Inaugurating an extensive drive for members being undertaken by the Progressive Club, local chapter of the American Student Union, a meeting of all interested students was held last night at the Union at which the work and aims of the organization were discussed by student speakers. The uniting of liberal student opin- ion throughout the country is the primary purpose of the American Student Union, stated Morris Lichten- stein, '39. The ASU has 20,000 mem- bers on 200 college and high school campuses, he added, which are bound together on a common program of peace, racial and social equality, academic freedom, and civil liberties. In a discussion following Lichten- stein's talk, work of the Progressive Club in sponsoring the Czechoslovak- ian rally, in investigating co-opera- tives and the campus labor problem, and circulating petitions protesting the recent Nazi outrages against Ger- man Jews was emphasized. It was pointed out that the ASU is not a radical organization, but has a broad enough program to include varying shades of progressive opinion. In connection with the membership drive, fraternities, dormitories and various campus organizations will be canvassed. SRA To Participate Economic Council Should Observe National Trends, Committee Says Martin Minimizes Of Communists In Power Union (Editor's Note: This is the second in 1 a series of articles dealing with the pro- posal to form a National Economic Council to investigate and make sug- gestions for a long-range planning of our national life.) By JACK SULLIVAN The functions of the proposed Na- tional Economic Council should be in harmony with its purpose of making studies and investigations and' in- tegrating them into a plan for ad- vising and aiding Congress and other governmental offices, according to the report of the Senate Committee in- vestigating the desirability of estab- lishing such a council. "In function the Council should be designed," says the Committee re- port, "to keep our national problems and trends, especially the more im- portant ones, under an observation continuous in character and broad enough, well coordinated enough, and generally well informed enough to be quick and penetrating in discern- tional life. A reasonably accurate diagnosis of the complex causes of these problems is the first step, thef Senate Committee report points out, in prescribing a remedy. At present we do not have adequate machinery for making such an analysis in anl impartial manner, and this need the Council would fill. With an eye to the future, the Sen- ate Committee suggests that the pro- posed Council would "help us clarify and develop more satisfactory prin- ciples as a base for public policy." Believing that the "bewildering as- pects of our time" can be traced to the failure of our social and economic institutions to keep pace with the development"of science and industry, the Committee would have the Coun- cil endeavor to keep the development of political principles and institu- tions abreast with progress in indus- try. "Our failure to develop such principles," says the Committee re- port. "is due in nart to the fact that WASHINGTON, bec. 1.-Homer Martin, president of the United Au- tomobile Workers, appearing reluc- tantly before the House Committee on un-American Activities, called the group a "political tool in the hands of reactionary" interests and testified that the number of Communists seek- ing control of the American labor movement had been overemphasized. On what he called reliaJle author- tiy,' Martin charged Judge Paul V. Gadola of Flint, who had criticized Governor' Murphy's handling of the sit-down strikes, with participating in meetings called to raise money foi Italy's conquest of Ethiopia. Gadola last night denied this. Communists, like Nazis and Fas- cists, try to place their men in key positions in labor unions, he said, adding that they did not discrimin- ate between the AFL and theCrIO. Galens First-Day Tag Sale Nets $700 For The Need) The return in the annual Galen two-day tag drive approximates $704 i a Film To night Features David Garrick Story "Peg of Old Drury" which is being shown here tonight and tomorrow night by the Art Cinema League, is an English film dealing with the ro- mance of David Garrick, matinee idol of the 1740's and Peg Woffington, an Irish girl who rose to fame on the stage of the famous Drury Lane Theatre. This picture, starring Sir Cedric r r i } 3 1 L ina-Bound Body Welcomed At Canal Aboard S.S. Santa Clara En Route to Lima, Peru, Dec. 1-(P)Secretary Hull and the United States delega- tion to the Pan-American Conference sailed southward tonight from the